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Israel: soldier admits he knew slain peace activist Hurndall
was unarmed
By Brian Smith
23 December 2004
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An Israeli soldier on trial for killing British peace activist
Tom Hurndall in the Gaza Strip in 2003 has admitted that he lied
when he said his victim was camouflaged and carrying a gun. He
also claims that he was under orders to open fire on anyone, even
unarmed people.
The admission further exposes the ruthless nature of Israels
illegal occupation of Palestine, and vindicates the fight by the
family and supporters of Tom Hurndall to expose the truth and
force a retrial.
Tom Hurndall, 22, from London, was studying photography at
Manchester University when he arrived in the West Bank on April
4, 2003, to photograph the work of the International Solidarity
Movement (ISM). He joined its human shield force, acting as buffers
between the Palestinians and the military, as part of an effort
to oppose the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
On April 11, 2003, he was in the Rafah refugee camp with eight
other members of the ISM and had been escorting children to safety
during gunfire when snipers opened fire from a tower to the east
and he was shot in the head. He was declared brain dead on arrival
at Rafah Hospital and, after spending nine months in a coma, he
died on January 13, 2004.
There is no question that his shooting was deliberate. At the
time, an eyewitness and British ISM colleague Rafael Cohen reported
that he was standing 15 metres away when the shooting occurred.
Israeli troops were firing over the heads of a group of children
playing on a mound of earth and Tom had gone to pull them to safety.
He was trying to pull two girls out of danger when he was
hit in the head by a bullet, said Cohen.
At first they were firing several metres over the childrens
heads but it was getting very, very dangerous so Tom went to help
them. He was at ground level when they shot him directly in the
head.
Sergeant Idier Wahid Taysir is charged with manslaughter for
shooting Hurndall, though he denies it. He was initially charged
with assault on December 2003, but the charges were upgraded when
Hurndall died in January 2004.
The trial has been held at a court within a military base at
Castina Junction in Ashkalon, near Tel Aviv. It opened on May
10, 2004, but has been adjourned for most of the time since.
The military investigation initially cleared Sgt. Taysir, but
the trial was reopened under pressure from the Hurndall family.
The British Foreign Office was also obliged to intervene after
the armys account of the shooting was shown to be false.
Carl Arrindell, a family friend and spokesman for the Tom Hurndall
Foundation, said that lawyers would also want to establish if
any systemic causes led to the shooting and if responsibility
for Mr. Hurndalls death lay higher up the chain of command.
Tom Hurndalls sister Sophie also attacked the armys
actions, reasoning, The fact that over 4,000 Palestinian
civilians have been killed, and 79,000 seriously injured over
the last few years, shows that there are no acceptable guidelines
governing Israeli Defence Force behaviour.
Sgt. Taysir, who was with one of the IDFs Bedouin units
based in Rafah, has also been charged with obstruction of justice.
He told the court that he did not know details of the armys
rules of engagement. I dont know them. No one ever
explained anything to me about these documents. Unable to
read Hebrew, the army sergeant said he did not believe others
in his unit had any more knowledge about rules of engagement
than he did.
Taysir told the army investigators that he had opened fire
at Hurndall because the Briton was on the edge of the security
zone, carrying a weapon and wearing camouflage clothing. In fact,
he had not entered the closed zone, had no gun and was wearing
a bright orange jacket.
British Guardian-online reports that the sergeant told
the military court that after shooting Hurndall he had reported
it to his commander. I told him that I did what Im
supposed to; anyone who enters a firing zone must be taken out.
[The commander] always says this, he said.
The prosecutor then asked the sergeant if Mr. Hurndall had
a weapon.
In a dramatic shift Sgt. Taysir replied: No. Thats
the truth.
So you gave a false report to the company commander?
the prosecutor asked.
I did not give a false report. He might have had a weapon
under his clothing. People fire freely there. The [Israeli army]
fires freely in Rafah.
The prosecutor continued: But you told him that you saw
a weapon?
Right.
So you lied?
I said it.
The prosecutor then asked: After that, you also reported
that the man fired in the air and at you, right? Why did you report
that he fired at you?
The sergeant replied: Because I had already fired without
getting approval [from the company commander]. Everything was
under pressure and a result of fear. They tell us all the time
to fire; that there is approval. All the troops [in Rafah] fire
without approval at anyone who crosses a red line.
The Guardian reports Tom Hurndalls mother, Jocelyn,
welcoming the soldiers testimony. She believes that it confirms
the familys belief that Sgt. Taysir was not a rogue element
but operating under a military policy that permitted the shooting
of unarmed civilians.
We remain extremely concerned about the culture in which
the soldier was functioning, she said. It seems from
what hes said that he was following orders, that he was
doing what he was told to do and what other soldiers are told
to do.
News from this trial comes soon after confirmation that the
Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) is promoting a shoot-to-kill policy
at the highest levels as evidenced by the recent killing of 13-year-old
Iman al-Hams, gunned down in cold blood in Gaza.
The right-wing coalition government led by Ariel Sharon and
the Israeli military is only able to behave the way it does because
of the tacit approval of the US administration and the British
government, who are keen to use the methods garnered in Occupied
Palestine for use in the cities of Iraq and farther afield.
Hurndall was the third member of the ISM to be severely wounded
or killed by the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) in a month. The
shooting is part of a pattern of attacks on the ISM, aimed at
forcing them and other Western observers to leave the Occupied
Territories and allow the IDF to proceed with its murder and repression
of the Palestinians unhindered and unobserved. The IDF denied
any knowledge of the shooting, despite admitting troops offered
medical assistance and airlifted [Tom] to a hospital in Beersheva.
In March 2003, US citizen Rachel Corrie, 23, was crushed to
death by the blade of an Israeli army bulldozer in Rafah while
protecting the home of a Palestinian family. She was clearly recognisable
as an international peace activist and peaceful protester. However
an Israeli army whitewash into her death, led by the chief of
the general staff of the IDF, concluded that its forces were not
to blame and even accused Corrie and other members of the ISM
of illegal, irresponsible and dangerous behaviour.
In April 2003, ISM activists Danish citizen Lasse Schmidt,
35, and US citizen Brian Avery, 24, were hit by shrapnel from
an Israeli armoured personnel carrier while attempting to protect
Palestinian children in Jenin who had ventured into the curfew-deserted
streets. Two armoured personnel carriers advanced towards them
at low speed. Despite having their hands raised above their heads
and wearing fluorescent red vests identifying them as international
peace activists, they were shot at from only 50 metres away. A
burst of machinegun fire hit the ground in front of them so that
they were sprayed by a shower of broken bullets and stones.
These incidents followed several others a month earlier where
ISM volunteers had come under Israeli fire for approaching bulldozers.
Some were injured.
The US State Department refused to condemn the Corrie murder
and has kept silent on the Avery shooting. The State Department
has simply endorsed the Israeli investigation which produced a
whitewash of the IDF. The Bush administration has refused to even
protest attacks on its citizens, let alone offered protection.
The US Consulates response was, We do not accept any
responsibility for anyone who ignores our travel advisories and
illegally enters the Gaza Strip.
See Also:
Israel: Brutal crackdown on
anti-occupation activists
[8 January 2004]
British activist in
critical condition after being shot by Israeli military
[16 April 2003]
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